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  2. Real-estate bubble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real-estate_bubble

    Real estate bubbles are invariably followed by severe price decreases (also known as a house price crash) that can result in many owners holding mortgages that exceed the value of their homes. [ 32 ] 11.1 million residential properties, or 23.1% of all U.S. homes, were in negative equity at December 31, 2010. [ 33 ]

  3. Timeline of the 2000s United States housing bubble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_2000s...

    1990: In January 1990, the Median Home Price was $125,000, while the Average Home Price was $151,700. [18] The average cost of a new home in 1990 is $149,800 [19] ($234,841 in 2007 dollars). 1991–1997: Flat Housing prices. 1991: US recession, new construction prices fall, but above inflationary growth allows them to return by 1997 in real terms.

  4. Early 1990s recession in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_1990s_recession_in...

    July 1990 marked the end of what was at the time the longest peacetime economic expansion in U.S. history. [2] [5] Prior to the onset of the early 1990s recession, the nation enjoyed robust job growth and a declining unemployment rate. The Labor Department estimates that as a result of the recession, the economy shed 1.623 million jobs or 1.3% ...

  5. Amid commercial real estate crash, offices are ‘once in a ...

    www.aol.com/finance/amid-commercial-real-estate...

    The hybrid-work trend and high interest rates have sent commercial real estate values crashing in major cities, with Morgan Stanley warning earlier this year that office prices could face a 30% ...

  6. Is the housing market going to crash? What the experts ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/housing-market-going-crash...

    The U.S. housing market had finally started slowing in late 2022, and home prices seemed poised for a correction. But a strange thing happened on the way to the housing market crash: Home values ...

  7. Early 1990s recession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_1990s_recession

    Canada's economy is considered to have been in recession for two full years in the early 1990s, specifically from April 1990 to April 1992. [7] [8] [a] Canada's recession began about four months before that of the US, and was deeper, likely because of higher inflationary pressures in Canada, which prompted the Bank of Canada to raise interest rates to levels 5 to 6 percentage points higher ...

  8. The turning point for America's real estate market is finally ...

    www.aol.com/housing-ice-age-thawing-092202860.html

    The baseline expectation for the spring, the Redfin economist Chen Zhao told me, is a modest uptick in sales and new listings. Most economists don't expect mortgage rates to fall dramatically ...

  9. List of economic crises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_economic_crises

    Economic bubble, stock market bubble and real-estate bubble; Market correction, real and nominal value, economic equilibrium; Kondratiev wave, business cycle and business cycle models; Involuntary unemployment; Fictitious capital, Intrinsic value, Speculation; Crisis theory, tendency of the rate of profit to fall, reserve army of labour